Does anyone know how to say "you're welcome" in Latin?
Of course in the sense of
A:"Thanks"
B:"You're Welcome"

The odds are that form isn't in any text we have however. We can try to invent a form based on modern romance languages (i.e. Italian, Spanish and French). In this three languages we say:
- di niente / de nada / de rien
- non c'è di che / no hay de que / no french translation
I think we should work on the latter.
What do you think about that?

In reply to doctissimo Tadwelessare, nihil laboris est is used by just about every conversational Latin guide but I can find no primary text so we can presume one or more of the following:
a. I have not read the entire corpus of Latin literature
b. it's somewhere in Erasmus
c. it's something medieval
c. it is the accepted neo-Latin phrase

tadwelessar wrote:The odds are that form isn't in any text we have however. We can try to invent a form based on modern romance languages (i.e. Italian, Spanish and French). In this three languages we say:- di niente / de nada / de rien- non c'è di che / no hay de que / no french translation